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![]() Brett Schultz ![]() Brett Nolan SchultzBorn: 26 August 1970, East London, Cape ProvinceMajor Teams: Eastern Province, Western Province, South Africa, Gauteng. Known As: Brett Schultz Batting Style: Left Hand Bat Bowling Style: Left Arm Fast Test Debut: South Africa v India at Durban, 1st Test, 1992/93 Latest Test: South Africa v Pakistan at Rawalpindi, 1st Test, 1997/98 ODI Debut: South Africa v India at Port Elizabeth, 2nd ODI, 1992/93 First-class debut: Eastern Province B v Natal B at Durban, 1989/90 Eastern Province debut same season Education: Alexander Road HS, Kingswood College, UPE Junior Representative Cricket: EP Nuff 1988-89, SA Schools 1989 Career Statistics:TESTS (including 06/10/1997) M I NO Runs HS Ave SR 100 50 Ct St Batting & Fielding 9 8 2 9 6 1.50 15.51 0 0 2 0 O M R W Ave BBI 5 10 SR Econ Bowling 288.5 82 749 37 20.24 5-48 2 0 46.8 2.59 ONE-DAY INTERNATIONALS (including 09/12/1992) M I NO Runs HS Ave SR 100 50 Ct St Batting & Fielding 1 0 - - - - - - - 0 0 O M R W Ave BBI 4w 5w SR Econ Bowling 9 1 35 1 35.00 1-35 0 0 54.0 3.88 FIRST-CLASS (1989/90 - 1997/98) M I NO Runs HS Ave 100 50 Ct St Batting & Fielding 60 57 16 309 36* 7.53 0 0 10 0 O M R W Ave BBI 5 10 SR Econ Bowling 2010.2 447 5687 233 24.40 8-36 12 0 51.7 2.82 LIST A LIMITED OVERS (1989/90 - 2000/01) M I NO Runs HS Ave 100 50 Ct St Batting & Fielding 80 13 9 17 5 4.25 0 0 12 0 O R W Ave BBI 4w 5w SR Econ Bowling 670.2 2508 136 18.44 6-22 7 1 29.5 3.74 - Explanations of First-Class and List A status courtesy of the ACS. StatsGuru Filters for Brett SchultzStatistics involving Brett SchultzArticles about Brett SchultzProfile:"The Bear!" Injury permitting, the aggressive left-handed paceman, playing for Western Province since the 1996/7 season, could cement his place in the national side. Shultz, like the majority of genuinely fast bowlers, suffers equally from injuries, the resultant lack of fitness, and lack of accuracy. When he does get his line and length right, however, batsmen often get "done for pace". On his debut tour to the slow pitches of Sri Lanka, Schultz showed that his pace is through the air and not so much off the pitch. This, together with the angle of delivery, present major problems for both right- and left-handed batsmen. Schultz, having regained some of the form and aggression which earned him 20 wickets in the 3-Test series to Sri Lanka, made a late charge at the end of the 1996/7 season and was rewarded with selection to the national side.Thanks: Ashraf Conrad (cnrash02@socsci.uct.ac.za)
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